Camp Henry is a U. S. military base in Daegu, South Korea. Camp Henry was named in 1960 after First LieutenantFrederick F. Henry, who served with F Company, 38th Infantry Regiment, 2nd Infantry Division. Camp Henry is located in the Nam-gu District of Daegu City on 51 acres16 acres, it consists of administrative buildings and community support facilities. The U. S. Army Garrison - Daegu, headquartered at Camp Henry in Daegu, manages the installation and provides base operations services for the people who live and or work at Camp Carroll. Major tenant units on Camp Henry are the 19th Sustainment Command and the 403rd Army Field Support Brigade—Korea. Built by the Imperial Japanese Army in 1921, what became known as Camp Henry served as the headquarters for Jirō Minami, Governor-General of Korea between 1936 and 1942, as well as Japanese forces stationed in the Daegu area; when Korea was liberated from Japan in 1945, the camp was taken over by the Republic of Korea Army. During the Korean War, the camp saw little action because of its location inside the northern edge of the Pusan Perimeter.

The Tithe Barn at Cumhill Farm in Pilton, England, was built in the 14th century as a tithe barn to hold produce for Glastonbury Abbey. It is Scheduled Ancient Monument; the others are the Tithe Barn, Manor Farm, the West Pennard Court Barn and the Glastonbury tithe barn, now the Somerset Rural Life Museum. The barn, of coursed and squared rubble, was built in the 14th and 15th centuries to hold the produce from farms in the area who paid one tenth of their produce to Glastonbury Abbey as the landowner, it is one of four surviving monastic barns built by the Abbey. On 9 June 1963 lightning set fire to the thatched roof and it remained a wreck until Michael Eavis, organiser of the Glastonbury Festival, bought it in 1995, presented the barn to the Pilton Barn Trust; the project was made possible with a grant of £400,000 from English Heritage. The Glastonbury festival contributed a further £100,000. A new roof, replicating the original, using a combination of traditional carpentry techniques and modern technology, has been built, by Peter McCurdy using skills used when recreating the Globe theatre in London, from English oak which came from Northumberland.

The roof frame consists of cruck construction which sit high in the walls with an arcade plate carrying the apex of the roof above. McCurdy was assisted by a local team run by Jon Maine who designed and erected the complex scaffolding both internally and externally and using 8000 36" long oak hand split battens tiled the roof using over 30,000 hand made plain tiles. In addition to the new roof a new floor was laid, including a 3 metres wide strip in Blue Lias Stone and 44 cubic meters of lime concrete used to fill the expanses either side, it is said to be the largest expanse of lime concrete flooring anywhere in Europe. The restoration was nominated for the annual Wood Awards, which recognise and encourage outstanding design and installation in joinery and structures in wood, it was awarded the prize as the Best Use of British Timber Award and Structural Timber Award in 2005. It received the Royal Institute of British Architects Town and Country Design Award in the same year, it was opened on Friday 1 April 2005 by local historian Sir John Keegan and is now used for public events such as medieval fairs, weddings, Somerset Arts Week and village events.